0 past simple and past participle of migrate
1 When an animal migrates, it travels to a different place, usually when the season changes:
2 to begin using a new computer system, or to move information from one type of system to another:
From the sixteenth until the eighteenth century people migrated only on a seasonal basis to work in the fishery.
By following the cantilever displacements as the cells migrated over these cantilevers, they determined the distribution of tension exerted by the cells on the substrate.
On the first postoperative day, the stent in the orifice of the right pulmonary vein migrated to the descending aorta.
In the present experiment subsequent infection of mice by somatically migrated larvae was examined.
In contrast, we found that larvae that had migrated to the brain remained there, although some migrated to the eyes.
By the middle of 1853 some 50,000 diggers had migrated to the valley, and a government camp had been established to administer the field.
Appropriating the colonizers' claims to bring ' progress ', migrants attempted to achieve status and influence in the villages from which they had migrated.
Their sons migrated for reasons of economic hardship and personal insecurity following political harassment.